Getting the best from the DOC 200/250 series traps

If you have the opportunity to do some trapping for predators and choose popular DOC-series traps, here are some suggestions on how to get the best from them.

These traps are typically mounted in wooden boxes though plastic options have recently appeared.

Stoats, weasels and ferrets, collectively called mustelids, have a fine sense of smell, so can be turned off by something whiffy.

Be careful, for instance, not to leave discarded rotten baits near the entrance.

Avoid anything that might taint the wooden boxes, such as leaving them on a diesel-stained truck bed. And don’t let your dog piddle on or near a trap.

These odours can seriously affect catch rates until they weather off.

Be careful too about using a strong-scented soap before handling traps. Rub earth into your hands to neutralise any human or other smells before touching traps.

Fish oil sold as a steel preservative is used by some trappers, but it can create issues.

Left: Trimming the entrance back and installing an angled wooden ramp.

Dust and dirt sticks to it and then it dries hard and can actually slow traps down.

A much better plan is to get stainless steel versions of the DOC trap that don’t need to rely on stinky rust preservatives such as Fisholene. They cost a bit more, but maintenance and replacement also comes at a cost.

Many trappers increase the entrance mesh holes to 100 x 100mm.

Keep the entry clear of grass, for instance with a squirt of Roundup.

For some reason the mesh as supplied is left cut along the bottom of the entrance leaving sharp spikes projecting up.

Use a small pair of snips to remove this entirely to make this outer entry much more inviting for these low-slung creatures.

It’s a good idea to also nail inside the trap a small angled wooden ramp with a flat section after that to firstly, hide the shiny vertical trap bar which may intimidate some animals.

Secondly, it lines the animal up square with the trap plate for a cleaner catch.

Tuning your trap

Some traps come hastily screwed into their box with too much of a gap on one side.

Smaller vermin can sneak around the back without crossing the plate.

Right: Now that’s what I call a warning sign!

Likewise some traps are set too far back from the second or inside mesh opening, which is meant to guide the critter directly over the kill plate.

You’ll cotton on to something being wrong when you find dead pests caught on their way out. How did they get past the plate the first time?

If there is a gap you can either reposition the trap properly, or if someone has assembled the box itself a bit too wide, you can nail in behind the trap a thin piece of plywood to shim the gap away.

A carpenters’ bradawl is a small sharp-pointed tool used to make a hole in wood to start off screws and similar jobs.

With the trap positioned where you actually want it, you can use the bradawl to mark the dead centre of the screw holes, then drill a pilot hole using these.

The bradawl is also used by some trappers in the field to prick the blunt end of an egg bait “to let the smell out”.

If you don’t want to let the egg contents drip out and eventually go rotten inside the box as well, be sure to leave the hole facing upwards.

Most people leave the egg whole, experiment and choose what works best for you.

Trap box lids are typically supplied having only a small stencilled black warning sign that quickly fades away.

I use red spray-paint on top of this with a much larger stencil which was custom made by Parkin & Payne Ltd., Onehunga.

As well as the internationally recognised symbol, it says: WARNING DON’T TOUCH.

Settings & safety

DOC traps come with varying “spring-off” weights and if they’re set too high you’ll be lucky to get anything.

Infra-red “no-glow” game cameras set by these traps will often tell you what’s going on while you’re tucked up in bed.

Each DOC trap, (such as 200, 250’s etc.), has a different-sized safety tool.

Make sure you ask for one when you buy the trap.

Tie something you can’t lose to it like a large bit of colourful ribbon.

If the trap goes off and your hands aren’t where they’re supposed to be, the safety catch may well save you a trip to hospital.

A trap that catches a rat one end is much more likely to catch a mustelid on the other end, but only if the second trap remains poised to go off.

In this trapper’s experience, double trap boxes don’t work with DOC traps.

The first trap violently going off invariably jars the remaining one off.

This “overkill” makes the second trap redundant.

I have experimented with mounting the traps on hard rubber, cutting relief slots in the trap box to interfere with the vibration wave, and so on.

Recently I learnt that plywood, with its multidirectional layers, will dampen shock-wave vibrations in other applications but I have yet to try this on a double DOC trap.

However a Northland DOC officer recently tipped me off to what works; don’t screw the trap into the box.

This will fix the problem in DOC 200 traps but not the 250’s, which are still too violent.

Setting the unsecured DOC 200 trap is not going to be easy until you learn the knack, so make certain that you have that safety in place – or much safer still, just don’t use double-DOC traps!

If vermin narrowly escape being caught, they’ll seldom fall for the same trap design again.

That’s why I believe that the DOC traps should be set in conjunction with Fenn traps to stop trap-shy predators treating your traps with impunity.

The humane Fenn trap has, since 1959, been the go-to trap of British gamekeepers.

I believe it is also a lot safer to use around human hands and my catch rates with Fenn traps have been considerably higher than with DOC traps!

If you’re worried about young children having access to the trapping area, then consider using a Holden Live Trap (available on trademe.co.nz, which works on a see-saw principle. The animal remains locked inside the trap, often asleep when you find it.

The Holden trap is used for Tb detection work in some regions.

Choosing baits

What to bait with is a good question. Eggs have many advantages, such as being readily available and relatively cheap, especially if you have your own chooks or bantams.

Farm eggs are, of course, not washed in chook-factory sanitising washes, so they retain more chicken smells.

Putting a small hole in the top of eggs is purely optional. Try it with and without. There are also commercial baits:

(1) Connovation’s Eraze is like a segmented chocolate bar made from freeze-dried rabbit:

In summer, fresh meat baits may last only four days or so but they’ll be a productive few days!

Right: Sharp bradawls have several uses.

One tip from an NZ-based international mustelid expert is to rub the rabbit’s gut contents against and around the trap entrance, on nearby trees, rocks, etc.

Pile on the smell and see what happens. Don’t expect a catch every time, but persistence will pay off.

Drags of dead rabbits with gut exposed can also help. Just tie a bit of rope to it and drag it past some likely habitat, such as the boundary of a rank grass area or swamp, drain or lake edge, up to the trap entrance/s.

On a hot summer’s night this might work, but before heavy winter rain perhaps not.

Adding a few feathers inside the trap and also kicking up some earth around the trap entrance or making a clean track leading up to the trap also helps, the latter especially so. A gamekeeper’s motto: ‘Clean entry – clean catch’.

Salted rabbit will get around the fly-blown problems of fresh rabbit/hare meat but the salt is corrosive to metal traps. However if you are using plastic Holden Live Capture traps, it seems to be ideal.

The DOC series traps are relatively open to the weather with their mesh sides but you can help bait life by putting it inside a plastic .22 rimfire ammunition packet, side on and lid removed, just under the roof.

Drill a couple of holes in one end and use a cable tie to secure that to the end mesh.

Don’t leave such a case unsecured or it could interfere with the trap as the animal runs off with it.

Left: A rimfire ammo packet with a few extra holes (to let the smell out), will hold bait where it’s relatively sheltered, under the lid (shown is a D-Block rat bait).

A small strip of overhanging roofing iron on the trap lid will help bait life somewhat. Secure with a stone or log to weigh it down.

Hedgehogs will squeeze themselves down and through the smallish mesh entrance.

When they get clobbered by the kill bar they’re a lot harder to remove.

These animals will predate duck and other game bird eggs and are well worth the trouble to catch.

The local quail will especially appreciate your efforts.

Where to site your trap

Where to put the DOC trap is mainly trial and error, but a little thought should go into it.

Right: By having a variety of traps, (shown is a Fenn Mk4 with a ferret), you’ll eliminate trap-shy animals which learn to avoid a trap type they had a near-miss with. This trap had just been slicked up with some paraffin-based Dry-Lube on the working surfaces. This ferret died instantly though a Mk 6 Fenn is probably a better choice for ferrets, the Mk4 for weasels, stoats and rats.

They should be laid out in such a way that you don’t have to go well out of your rounds to check a single outlier trap.

Keep the traps out of direct sunlight and it will help meat bait life in summer.

The opposite may work with dried baits, so experiment. Place traps where cattle can’t knock them over and where farming operations aren’t affected.

If human interference might be a problem, consider some sort of notice explaining what they’re for, and pointing out it that it’s illegal and dangerous to interfere with them.

Talk to neighbours who have young kids.

Next to a stream or large drain is good trap site, but always secure the trap well to something like a tree or a warratah in case floodwaters rise and float it off.

Barns are great places to trap in or around because the hay inside in winter is filled with mice and this attracts mustelids.

Any small rat-sized entry hole anywhere in the barn’s side is ideal to trap beside.

Have a look also for seeding trees like macadamias, puriri, and karaka.

This bounty of seeds on the ground will attract rats which in turn attracts mustelids.

Rats are well worth catching in themselves as they also steal game bird eggs and chicks.

They also climb and swim well so no nest is safe.

Also a trap that has just caught a rat now smells much more interesting to any mustelid that passes by.

Try to think like the critters you are trying to catch.

Where is their food at this time of year? Is there an offal pit nearby? Where can they find shelter?

Look for a pile of logs, rocks, timber posts, old iron and such-like.

If you have a pond, then of course you’ll want to surround the boundary to give ground nesting ducks a chance especially through spring, from early June onwards. If you are feeding duck (where legal), or pheasants, be sure to have traps and/or poison rat baits nearby.

Keep a diary

A trapping diary will help you spot which traps (be sure to number them) are performing, and which need shifting.

Left: A “well corrugated” weasel caught near Albany in a DOC-200, (Photo courtesy Richard Baalham). Weasels, especially female ones, are smaller and therefore hardest of all mustelids to catch, so well done.

You can also note the techniques that work best. Mind you, their first catch is often all a trap needs to start working.

Traps represent a not insignificant investment and, depending on where you live, it can sometimes be possible to get regional council or other funding.

Fish & Game can probably assist with this. Be sure to include in any application the cost of lures (that attract animals) or baits, (that poison them).

The DOC series traps don’t catch possums so you might want to add in the cost of some Timms or similar traps for these.

Having a DOC trap near a Timms one can be complimentary, with the dead possum attracting mustelids.

Putting a fresh possum on a trap lid will sometimes catch a stoat because it doesn’t want to be caught in the open by a hawk or similar, so it first rushes into cover under the carcass and snap!

Especially if you see the tell-tale signs of fresh mustelid feeding, usually around the gut or on the neck, putting the recent kill on a trap lid can produce a result overnight – or sometimes in just minutes.

If a stoat has been in the hen house, a dead chook carcass on the trap often gets results, but remove the other carcasses to give it Hobson’s choice.

If you see a mustelid while you’re out shooting and it disappears from view, you can often “squeak it out” from cover for a shot by making squeaking noises with your lips against the back of your hand.

If you sound like a mouse, curiosity will draw it back out. It worked a treat for me one day, though my #5 weight trout fly rod was really the wrong calibre.

Keep in mind that predator competitions were made to encourage people just like you.

So put in an entry, even if it’s just one tail, as the odds are usually good.

It will also encourage the organiser and support your fellow trappers.

They say that you get out of a sport proportional to what you put into it.

Trapping predators is one very productive way to make your “game season” last all year round.

Several New Zealand Internet forums will not only put you in touch with help, advice and support from other trappers, but also provide a chance to “brag your catch”.